ABSTRACT: Introduction: Ethics of War and Peace : An Introduction, by
Henrik Syse and Gregory M. Reichberg.
Articles: 1. Maintaining the Protection of Non-Combatants James Turner
Johnson.
2. Protecting the Natural Environment in Wartime : Ethical Considerations from
the Just War Tradition, by Gregory Reichberg and Henrik Syse.
3. The New Practice of UN-Authorized Interventions : A Slippery Slope of
Forcible Interference?, by Anne Julie Semb.
4. A Ethical Uncerta inties of Nationalism, by Dan Smith.
5. A The Future Soul of Europe : Nationalism or Just Patriotism? A Critique of
David Miller's Defence of Nationality, by Andreas Føllesdal.
6. Genocide : A Case for the Responsibility of the Bystander, by Arne Johan
Vetlesen.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
PART i. INTRODUCTION:.
1. The rome statute of the international criminal court.
PART 2: NULLUM CRIMEN SINE LEGE:.
1. Nullum crimen sine lege in national law.
2. International human rights standards.
3. War crimes trials conducted after the second world war.
4. The ad hoc international criminal tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and
for Rwanda.
5. Discussion on establishing a permanent international criminal court.
6. The Rome statute.
PART 3: CRIMES WITHIN THE JURISDICTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT :
GENOCIDE; CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY AND WAR CRIMES:.
1. Genocide.
2. Crimes against humanity.
3. War crimes.

ABSTRACT: Introduction. The History of the Relationship Between
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law Noëlle Quénivet.
Part A: Concepts and Theories:.
Chapter I. Fundamental Standards of Humanity: A Common Language of
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law Marco Odello; Chapter II.
End Justifies the Means? – Post 9/11 Contempt for Humane Treatment Agnieszka
Jachec-Neale; Chapter III. Legal Conclusion or Interpretative Process? Lex
Specialis and the Applicability of International Human Rights Standards Conor
McCarthy.
Part B: Issues of Applicability: Chapter IV. Legal Reasoning and the
Applicability of International Human Rights Standards During Military
Occupation Conor McCarthy; Chapter V. Triggering State Obligations
Extraterritorially: The Spatial Test in Certain Human Rights Treaties Ralph
Wilde; Chapter VI. DRC v. Uganda: The Applicability of International
Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law in Occupied Territories Tom Ruys and
Sten Verhoeven.
Part C: Issues of Implementation: Chapter VII. Individuals as Subjects of
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law Cátia Lopes and Noëlle
Quénivet; Chapter VIII. Concurrent Application of International Humanitarian
Law and Human Rights Law: A Victim Perspective Jean-Marie Henckaerts; Chapter
IX. The Implementation of International Humanitarian Law by Human Rights
Courts: The Example of the Inter-American Human Rights System Emiliano J.
Buis; Chapter X. “Collateral Damages” of Military Operations: Is
Implementation of International Humanitarian Law Possible Using International
Human Rights Law Tools? Giovanni Carlo Bruno; Chapter XI. The Role of the UN
Security Council in Implementing International Humanitarian Law and Human
Rights Law Gregor Schotten and Anke Biehler.
Part D: The Protection of Specific Rights and Persons: Chapter XII. The Right
to Life in International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law Noëlle
Quénivet; Chapter XIII. Protection of Women in International Humanitarian Law
and Human Rights Law Anke Biehler; Chapter XIV. Protection of Children in
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law Vesselin Popovski; Chapter
XV. Unaccompanied Minors and the Right to Family Reunification in
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law: The Iraqi Experience
Kyriaki Topidi; Chapter XVI. Crossing Legal Borders: The Interface Between
Refugee Law, Human Rights Law and Humanitarian Law in the “International
Protection” of Refugees Alice Edwards.
Part E: Specific Situations: Chapter XVII. Fair Trial Guarantees in Occupied
Territory – The Interplay between International Humanitarian Law and Human
Rights Law Yutaka Arai-Takahashi; Chapter XVIII. Terrorism in International
Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law Roberta Arnold; Chapter XIX. Judging
Justice: Laws of War, Human Rights, and the Military Commissions Act of 2006
Christian M. De Vos; Chapter XX. Targeted Killings and International Law: Law
Enforcement, Self-defense, and Armed Conflict Michael N. Schmitt; Chapter XXI.
Implementing the Concept of Protection of Civilians in the Light of
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law: The Case of MONUC
Katarina Månsson; Conclusions Roberta Arnold; Index

ABSTRACT: PART I: WARFARE: THE ACTORS, THE LAW:.
1. The setting.
2. Introduction to the law of warfare.
PART 2 : REAFFIRMATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW:.
3. The conference of government experts on the reaffirmation and development
of international humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts, 24 May - 12
June, 1971).
4. The conference of government experts on the reaffirmation and development
of international humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts (second
session), 3 May - 2 June, 1972.
5. The first session of the diplomatic conference on reaffirmation and
development of international humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts,
Geneva, 20 February - 29 March 1974.
6. Applicability of customary international law in non-international armed
conflicts.
7. The conference of government experts on the use of certain conventional
weapons, Lucerne, 24 September - 18 October, 1974.
8. The conference of government experts on the use of certain conventional
weapons, second session, Lugano, 28 January - 26 February, 1976.
9.The diplomatic conference on reaffirmation and development of international
humanitarian law, applicable in armed conflicts, Geneva, 1974-1977.
10. The Netherlands and international humanitarian law applicable in armed
conflicts.
11. Development of customary law of armed conflict.
PART 3. MEANS AND METHODS OF WARFARE:.
12. Grotius' Jus in bello, with special reference to ruses of war and perfidy.
13. Incendiary weapons: legal and humanitarian aspects.
14. The soldiers and golf clubs.
15. Conventional weaponry: the law from St. Petersburg to Ludcerne and beyond.
16. The conventional weapons convention: functions of underlying legal
principles.
17. Prohibitions or restrictions on the use of methods and means of warfare in
the Gulf, 1980-1988.
18. The protection of cultural property in the events of armed conflict within
the framework of international humanitarian law.
19. Bombardment: from "Brussels 1874" to "Sarajevo 2003".
PART 4. COMBATANTS, CIVILIANS, GUERRILLA FIGHTERS; TERRORISTS:.
20. The position of guerrilla figters under the law of war.
21. "Guerrilla" and "Terrorism" in internal armed conflict.
22. Guerrilla and humanitarian law: an introduction.
23. Assistance to the victims of armed conflicts and other disasters.
24. Non-combatant persons: a comment to chapter 11 of the Commander's handbook
on the law of naval operations.
25. Enemy merchant vessels as legitimace military objectives.
26. "Enemy combatants" in American hands: are here limits to the President's
discretion?
PART 5: COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMENT:.
27. Implementation and enforcement of international humanitarian law.
28. Instructions for the armed forces.
29. Indivudal right to claim damages under article 3 of Hague convention IV:
expert opinion, 1997.
30. Individual right to claim damages under article 3 of Hague convention IV:
supplementary expert opinion, 1999.
31. The undertaking to respect and ensure respect in all circumstances: from
tiny seed to ripening fruit.
32. Will international humanitarian law protect tomorrow's war victims?
PART 6: REPRISALS AND FACT-FINDING:.
33. Reprisals in the CDDH.
34. Bellligerent reprisals revisited.
35. The international humanitarian fact-finding commission:its birth and early
years.
36. Reprisals and the protection of civilians: two recent decisions of the
Yugoslavia tribunal.
37. The international humanitarian Fact-finding Commission: a sleeping beauty?
38. The International humanitarian Fact-finding Commission established by the
firts additional protocol to the Geneva conventions.
PART 7: HUMANITARIAN LAW AND HUMAN RIGHTS:.
39. Protocol II, the CDDH and Colombia.
40. State sovereignty vs. international concern in some recent cases of the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
41. The qualification of specific situations as international armed conflict.
PART 8: HUMANITARIAN LAW AND NEUTRALITY:.
44. Neutrality.
45. Impartiality and neutrality in humanitarian law and practice.
46. International humanitarian law and violation of medical neutrality.
47. Legal aspects of "Medical neutrality".
48. Freedom of navigation and neutrality in the Gulf war, 1980-1988: the Dutch
and Belgian mine-hunting activities.
PART 10: SUMMING UP:.
49. The centennial of the first international peace conference:introduction.
50. Motion of thanks.